Advanced Search
Submit one or more of the following items, and they will be searched along with your query in the search box above.
Any submit button will submit all of the items you have changed.

+ Publication-Date Published in the last:

30 days
60 days
90 days
6 months
12 months
this year
2 years
3 years
5 years
10 years

Or published in the following date range:
From (yyyy/mm/dd - month and day are optional) to ('to' is optional)
+ Full Text
Retrieve articles with hyperlinks to:
full text (either free or subscription)
free full text
subscription full text
no full text link
+ Sort-Order
Sort the retrieved articles by:
relevance
publication date
+ Language And with languages:

+ Species
And for:
Humans
Animals
+ Gender
And for:
Male
Female
+ Age And for these age groups:

Newborn: birth to 1 month
Infant: 1 to 23 months
Preschool child: 2 to 5 years
Child: 6 to 12 years
Adolescent: 13 to 18 years
Adult: 19 to 44 years
Middle aged: 45 to 64 years
Aged: 65+ years
80 and over: 80+ years

+ Title
And for this query matching the titles:
+ Transliterated-Title
And for this query matching the title in original language:
+ Abstract
And for this query matching the abstratcs:
+ Major-Mesh
And for this query matching the MeSH-Major terms:
+ Mesh
And for this query matching any MeSH terms:
+ Journal
And for one or more of these journal abbreviated names:
OR OR
(see title abbreviations)+ Volume
And with journal volume number:
+ Issue
And with journal issue number:
+ Page
And with page number:
+ ISSN
And with ISSN:
+ Publication-Place
And with journal's country of publication:
+ Author

+ Affiliation
And with affiliation to:
+ Has-Abstract
Find MEDLINE records with the abstract status:
has abstract
does not have abstract
include both record types
include both record types but rank higher the records having abstract (the default BML behavior) + PMID
Show me only articles for these PMIDs (PubMed IDs):
+ Semantic-Type And with semantic types:

This section will show your queries and their results, when you start submitting queries to BioMedLib!

No Query!

The submitted query is ''

Email the results to the following email address:

Export the checked citations in RIS format (RIS format is used by RefWorks, Endnote, among others).

Examples
Find all 'gene or genome' associated with 'multiple sclerosis'.
See the results
Find all 'disease or syndrome' associated with 'nitric oxide'.
See the results
Find all 'neoplastic process' associated with 'green tea'.
See the results
Find all 'therapeutic or preventive procedure' associated with 'prostate cancer'.
See the results
Find all 'pharmacologic substance' associated with 'dementia'.
See the results
Find all 'plant' associated with 'arthritis'.
See the results
Find all 'governmental or regulatory activity' associated with 'obesity'.
See the results

About BioMedLib Review

These are some of the types of questions you can answer by using BioMedLib Review:

► "What are the new treatment options for breast cancer?"
► "What are the genes that are discovered for parkinson's in the past two years?"
► "What are the diseases that could cause tinnitus (noises in ears)?"

To search on BioMedLib Review:

1. Choose a 'semantic type' from the drop-down box (like the 'therapeutic or preventive procedure' for 'treatment options');2. Type some keywords in the search box (like the 'breast cancer' from the example aboves);3. Click the Search button.

To search on BioMedLib Search Engine:

1. Leave the drop-down box empty (the choice with dashes all across);2. Type some keywords in the search box;3. Click the Search button.

BioMedLib Review uses the 'semantic technology' developed by BioMedLib. For example, when you choose 'gene or genome' from the drop-down list, BMLR searches for over 500,000 unique gene names occuring in publications. This greatly simplifies the search for you, plus makes it possible to search for the 'class of all genes', which we call a 'semantic type'. There are over one hundred semantic types (however not all of them are equally useful for search).

Notes •
The term "associated with" in the above examples means that the two entities co-occur in the same sentence or abstract (textual association). It does not necessarily imply causation, nor numerical association.

•
Some of the semantic types occur infrequently in the publications; then it gets harder to find many good results (and searching for keywords along with a semantic type will only make the counts smaller). For example, here are counts of the year 2012 publications which contain each semantic type in their title: